Port Specifications
Purpose-built, two-berth cruise ship pier. No restrictions on length. 36 feet / 11 meters (MLW) depth alongside East Berth, 39 feet/ 12 meters (MLW) depth along side West Berth (Pilot compulsary ).
The pier is comprised of reinforced concrete and steel pile construction, formed by a main berthing span of 933.5 feet long with a dog-legged shore span of 958.2 feet. The pier is 40 feet wide and top of deck is 9.5 feet above MLW. The main berthing pier is 578.7 feet of workable surface for gangways and passenger access, and a continuation of three linked mooring dolphins of a further 405.8 feet — one every 111 to 124 feet. There are 100-ton mooring bollards on each side of the pier at 80 feet intervals with the outer end of the main pier having an extra set at 40 feet intervals. Fendering is of the flat-sided and cone-type designed to sit flush with the ship’s side.
Navigating Into The Port
The approach is an extremely simple one. The ships should approach on a heading of approximately 177° T, which is the alignment of the pier. The ship will be in deep water (200+ feet) until approaching the outer dolphin when the drop-off is crossed and the depth of water decreases immediately to 65 feet gradually reducing to 36 feet MLW, the controlling depth alongside the length of the pier. The maneuvering area off each berth is approximately 500 parallel to the pier on the east side and over 1000 feet on the west side of the pier.
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